When Winston Churchill won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1953, the citation hailed him for “his mastery of historical and biographical description as well as for brilliant oratory in defending exalted human values.”
Continue readingAuthor: Webb
Six million little pieces?
Days after Oprah Winfrey’s last Book Club selection was unmasked as fraud, triggering a national conversation among literati and lay readers alike about the definition and significance of memoir, the talk show host and cultural arbiter announced her next choice: “Night,” Elie Wiesel’s seminal autobiographical account of his experience during the Holocaust.
Continue readingJan Sehn
If one reads and examines the book written by Jan Sehn, the Judge who presided over the Auschwitz trials in Poland, one is immediately compelled to acknowledge the book’s numerous, woeful deficiencies. If researchers are expecting to find any startling revelations from the Auschwitz trials conducted in Poland immediately after the war or entertaining hopes to discover any other convincing evidence as to the existence of homicidal gas chambers at Auschwitz, they should think again. Nary one word from the actual trials of Hoess, Grabner, Liebehenschel, et al is cited. For rather predictable reasons, Sehn prefers to rely not on the records of the trials over which he personally presided, or on the affidavits or testimony of the accused and the accusers, or any additional supporting documentation, opting instead to quote liberally from Hoess’ memoirs. There is an underlying reason for this, of course. Testimonies and statements can be examined and compared for their truthfulness, coherence, and consistencies. They can also be examined for their untruthfulness, incoherence, and inconsistencies. Ergo Sehn deliberately avoids any mention of embarrassing testimony or statements which might lend themselves to an in-depth scrutiny by impartial researchers.
Continue readingIt’s okay to be a Jewish murderer
Holocaust ‘avengers’ recount deadly deeds
A group of elderly Holocaust survivors came forward yesterday with accounts of a death squad they formed after World War II to take revenge on their Nazi persecutors, recounting a brazen operation in which they poisoned hundreds of SS officers.
Continue readingAuschwitz Museum reduces death toll at Majdanek
Majdanek Victims Enumerated
Changes in the history textbooks? Lublin scholar Tomasz Kranz has established that the Nazis murdered 78,000 people at the Majdanek concentration camp — several times fewer than previous estimates
Continue readingGassing to Irving Berlin
Holocaust survivor shares story
Continue readingLiar Leon Bass says, ‘believe the lie’
Holocaust anything but a ‘myth’
Continue readingExcerpt: Britain’s secret torture centre
- The interrogation camp that turned prisoners into living skeletons.
Cannibalism at Dachau
Holocaust Survivor’s Prayer: Remember
Continue readingYou have the freedom to say what is permitted
The rights of a ‘paper Eichmann’
Continue reading